On a site where people as illustrious as Geneviève the patron saint of Paris, Victor Hugo, Voltaire and Rousseau are buried, one can expect the unexpected, including some ghosts.
An in-depth look at the history of concrete and how it has influenced architecture through the ages
Paris has some of the best street art in the world and whilst walking around the city you can get a pretty good introduction into its unique artistic style.
Why fixate on a single entity when New York City is further drenched in chain stores every passing year.?
If you love Paris, you'll love this exhibit. Higher Pictures gallery is showing a collection of postcards from the 1920s by photographer Pierre Yves Petit. In addition to the patina of age in these photographs, there is a deliberate moodiness captured through light, shadow and subject-matter.
If you love Paris, you'll love this exhibit. Higher Pictures gallery is showing a collection of postcards from the 1920s by photographer Pierre Yves Petit. In addition to the patina of age in these photographs, there is a deliberate moodiness captured through light, shadow and subject-matter.
Far from the western seashores of France, on a street near the Montparnasse train station looms a lighthouse atop a craggy rock!
Before the world knew about the abandoned City Hall subway station, I photographed it on a tour with the Transit Museum. This is a station unlike any other in New York, filled with stained glass, Roman brick, tiled vaults, arches and brass chandeliers.
Photos from the new topsy-turvy Lincoln Center lawn!
Just nearby my old apartment on Rue Mouffetard is the preserved storefront of Au Nègre Joyeux, the name of a chocolate factory that once existed at 14, Rue Mouffetard. It's truly hard to say what is more offensive: the use of the word negro in a company name, the fact that it was a chocolate factory.